Depends entirely on the load; can be a few hundred or a few thousand
All of them.
Depends entirely on the load; can be a few hundred or a few thousand
The .223 Remington rifle cartridge has a muzzle velocity of approximately 3600 feet per second.
The Crosman 1322 fires a .22 caliber pellet. It is rated at 460 Feet Per Second (FPS).The Crosman 1322 fires a .22 caliber pellet. It is rated at 460 Feet Per Second (FPS).
It depends on a number of variables, but in general, somewhere between approximately 800 feet per second and approximately 1100 feet per second.
The speed of bullets fired from rifles varies greatly, from about 600 feet per second to 5,000 feet per second.
The velocity of a .22 caliber firearm can vary depending on various factors such as the specific ammunition used and the barrel length of the firearm. Generally, the velocity of a .22 caliber firearm can range from around 1,000 feet per second to 1,800 feet per second.
It is a wildcat rifle using reformed or fireformed .300 weatherby brass. It is capable of shooting a 180 grain ballistic tip, 30 caliber bullet at 3350 feet per second. I believe it designed by Bob Hart.
It depends on what rifle and what cartridge is used. It can be as slow as 700 or 800 hundred feet per second (for 22 short rounds) or as high as several thousand feet per second for higher calibers.
Yes it is possible.
It depends on several factors, but it can be as slow a couple of hundred feet per second to as fast as a couple of thousand feet per second. Calibers that are considered standard, such as 9mm, .40, .45, etc typically travel between 800 feet per second and 1300 feet per second.
The general rule that is mostly true a lot of the time is that "caliber" is the diameter of the bore (the hole inside the barrel through which the bullet passes) as expressed in decimals, using inch units of measure. So a "thirty caliber" rifle would have a bore of .30 inch or 30/100 inch. A "twenty two caliber" gun fires a .22" diameter bullet. But "caliber" also means a particular name of a specific cartridge of a certain height, weight, width, angle, and gunpowder charge. For example, a .22 "long rifle" bullet weighs 40 grains and moves at an initial velocity of 1000 feet per second. But a .220 Swift rifle cartridge fires a bullet of the same diameter, but longer and heavier, and at over 3,000 feet per second. Two different caliber cartridges, but in each case the hole in the rifle's barrel is about 22/100 inch. I was not the question.